Trade Pass or Play: J.P. Arencibia

We are now beyond the start of Free Agency at 12:01 AM November 5. We at Phillies Nation will take a look at a players, namely outfielders, catchers, starting pitchers, and relievers, who the Phillies may target this offseason. We will explore potential performance, fit, cost, and feasibility. We continue today with our first “Trade Pass or Play” candidate, right-handed catcher J.P. Arencibia. And a reminder: you can check out all the “Pass or Play” posts by clicking on the category hyperlink.

Performance
Arencibia, 28 for Opening Day 2014, has been among the Majors’ best power hitting catchers over the last three seasons, averaging over 20 homers a season. That’s about where the compliments end.

The Phillies now have several catchers on the 40-man roster – Chooch was re-signed, Erik Kratz will likely be retained, and Cameron Rupp and Tommy Joseph are on the the 40-man roster. This move makes less sense as it once would have a few weeks ago but the Phillies have gone four-plus catchers deep a few times in the last few seasons.

Cost

Arencibia is a great buy-low trade candidate – he may be non-tendered tonight – and is a good candidate to be swapped for someone who is already on the 40-man but may no longer have a place on the roster. In this regard, John Mayberry is a good fit, but I’m not sure he would be enough. Arencibia is arbitration eligible for the first time this season.

Feasibility

In their never ending quest for the mythical “right-handed power bat”, Arencibia is definitely a fit on the Phils radar and they could afford his salary.

Verdict: Play

Arencibia is cheap enough and young enough that he’s worth a gamble. He will never likely improve his on-base skills but the strike outs could see a dip with proper coaching. I would actually prefer to trade someone, like Mayberry or Frandsen, to clear a 40-man spot for him to occupy rather than waiting for him to be non-tendered, he is probably better than Kratz, and Rupp would likely be better if he got a full year at Lehigh Valley under his belt.